
-
Elite women's sport revenue to top $2 billion: Deloitte
-
'Resilent fighters': why Yemen's Huthis are no pushover for US
-
European stocks advance before German spending vote
-
Trump, Putin to speak about Ukraine war
-
F1 boss holds talks with Thailand on hosting grand prix
-
'I'm alive': Russian Kursk evacuees reunite with families
-
China calls media outlets facing Trump funding axe 'notorious'
-
Paris police evict migrants from theatre after months-long occupation
-
Historic fantasy 'Assassin's Creed' sparks bitter battles
-
Bulgaria ski resort, once buzzing, creaks under crumbling infrastructure
-
Ivory Coast's epochal prehistoric finds pass unseen
-
US to execute four Death Row inmates this week
-
Trump treatment of Columbia puts US universities on edge
-
Kiribati eyes deep-sea mining deal with China
-
Colombian influencer puts the pizzazz into recycling
-
Under Trump, Washington cultural complex enters uncertain era
-
No Jokic, no problem as Gordon, Nuggets stun Warriors
-
220 reported dead as Israel pounds Gaza in most intense strikes since ceasefire
-
Hong Kong leader says concerns over Panama ports deal warrant 'attention'
-
New Zealand chasing 136 to win second Pakistan T20
-
Trump and Putin set for 'very critical' Ukraine call
-
German parliament to vote on huge spending boost for defence, infrastructure
-
Australia slams reported targetting of citizen by Hong Kong
-
China EV giant BYD soars after 5-minute charging platform unveiled
-
Israel pounds Hamas in Gaza in strikes that rescuers say killed 121
-
Red-hot Forest striker Wood targets New Zealand history at World Cup
-
'We will preserve them': saving Cambodia's crocodiles
-
Japan set to seal World Cup spot as Son aims to forget Spurs woes
-
Asian markets track Wall St gains as tech inspires Hong Kong
-
Japan victims voice fears 30 years after sarin subway attack
-
Bach's successor needs cool head to guide Olympics through stormy seas: experts
-
What happens to the human body in deep space?
-
Nvidia showcases AI chips as it shrugs off DeepSeek
-
Legalizing magic mushrooms under Trump? Psychedelic fans remain skeptical
-
Fired US federal worker in need of releasing steam? Try the internet
-
'No going back': Serbia protests heap pressure on government
-
USPA Global and Global Polo Entertainment Extend Historic ESPN Relationship
-
Trump touts control over famed arts venue
-
Trump taps Michelle Bowman to be US Fed vice chair for supervision
-
Jury deliberates US pipeline case with free speech implications
-
European star-gazing agency says Chile green power plant will ruin its view
-
Carney says Canada 'too reliant on US' on UK, France trip
-
Starbucks ordered to pay $50m for hot tea spill
-
Talks on divisive deep-sea mining resume in Jamaica
-
Astronauts finally to return after unexpected 9-month ISS stay
-
Trump veers towards courts clash over migrant flights
-
M23 shuns DR Congo peace talks at 11th hour after sanctions
-
Man Utd defy fan groups with five percent season ticket rise
-
Huthis report new US strikes after major rallies in rebel-held Yemen
-
UN chief meets rival Cyprus leaders ahead of talks

Russians speak of nerves and hope for peace as they shelter in Kursk
Andrey Klimenko hiccups and shifts his weight from one leg to the other.
"It's nerves," he says at a temporary refuge for people displaced by the fighting in Russia's Kursk region.
Ukraine launched a shock ground assault into the border region last August, capturing swathes of territory and dozens of villages.
But in the past two weeks Kyiv has lost its grip in Kursk, ceding ground as Moscow prosecutes an intense counter offensive.
"Planes were dropping bombs near my vegetable patch. I nearly died because of bombs, mortar fire and drones," said 52-year-old Klimenko, a Russian sporting several gold teeth.
"God took pity on me and I survived by a miracle."
Klimenko left his home in the village of Zamostye near the Ukrainian border on Friday as Russian forces pushed to recapture land occupied by Ukraine since last year.
The Ukrainian offensive was a response to Russia's campaign against the country launched three years ago.
Hundreds of inhabitants have fled the fighting in recent days as Russian forces have re-taken a string of villages and the key town of Sudzha.
Several dozen displaced people are being housed in a sports complex in Fatezh, 50 kilometres (30 miles) north of Kursk, the regional capital.
- 'Probably dead' -
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called on Ukrainian soldiers fighting in the area to lay down their weapons, while his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky has denied his troops are surrounded.
Since Wednesday "371 people have been evacuated from liberated areas, including 14 children," according to the region's interim governor, Alexander Khinshtein.
At the Fatezh sports complex, Elena, her daughter Ekaterina and grandson Egor have also sought shelter.
Elena, 63, said she had been given a blood pressure monitor by the Russian Red Cross, which is helping displaced people in the Kursk region.
"I've got high blood pressure," she says, putting her index finger to her forehead as if pointing to the worries that are weighing her down.
The family arrived from Sudzha on Friday after being evacuated by the Russian army.
Elena's husband Nikolai is missing.
His family have had no news of him since the beginning of the Kursk offensive last summer when they were moving from point to point in the Ukrainian-controlled area.
"Maybe he got scared and crawled away to hide. He's probably dead," said Ekaterina, 35, his daughter.
Nikolai is one of many missing.
In mid-February, the International Committee of the Red Cross said it was working on some 50,000 cases of missing persons, both civilians and combatants, on both sides.
- 'Feel sorry' -
"I don't understand what the point of this war is," Ekaterina said.
The fighting has left hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians and Russians dead or wounded in the biggest conflict in Europe since World War II.
She said the family had been "treated well" by Ukrainian soldiers.
"We're really looking forward to peace, because we feel sorry for the Russian soldiers, the Ukrainian soldiers and everyone else," she said.
Suddenly, a robotic voice from a loudspeaker nearby blasts an announcement for the village.
"The air raid alert is now over," it said -- even though no initial air raid alert had been given.
The military situation in the Kursk region is a key issue at a time of intensive international diplomacy to try and put an end to the conflict.
Putin, who is to hold talks with US counterpart Donald Trump on Tuesday, has said he is not opposed to the 30-day truce proposed by the United States and backed by Ukraine.
The next steps may well depend on the liberation of this Russian border region that was, during World War II, the scene of the largest tank battle in history.
That battle, on August 23, 1943, ended in a Soviet victory over Nazi troops.
A.Motta--PC